Talking with Furniture: Paul Lisicky

Paul Lisicky is the author of Lawnboy, Famous Builder, and the forthcoming books The Burning House (a novel, 2011) and Unbuilt Projects (short prose pieces, 2012). His work has appeared in Ploughshares, The Iowa Review, Five Points, StoryQuarterly,Gulf Coast, Seattle Review, Black Warrior Review,
and has been widely anthologized. A graduate of the Iowa Writers’
Workshop, he is the recipient of awards from the National Endowment for
the Arts, the James Michener/Copernicus Society, the Henfield
Foundation, and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, where he was
twice a fellow. He lives in New York City and Springs, New York, and has
taught in the graduate writing programs at Cornell University,
Rutgers-Newark, and Sarah Lawrence College. He currently teaches at NYU.
More at http://www.paullisicky.com/.

***

UF Review: Your forthcoming novel, The Burning House, is already getting a lot of buzz. How would you describe the book?

Lisicky:The Burning House is about a man
whose life unravels, for good and for bad, once his sister-in-law moves
in. It’s in part about grief, it’s in part about disruption and growth.
It’s also a book about sex, how sex can both sustain us and take us
off-kilter. I’ll be curious to see how it’s received. It’s the first
time I’ve written an ostensibly straight narrator, and you’re up against
the old stigma: can the gay actor play the straight romantic lead? But
people have come a long way in the last few years. Minds have opened,
and I’m having a good feeling about all that.

UF Review: Another forthcoming book, Unbuilt Projects,
is a collection of “short prose pieces.” How do you decide whether to
turn a narrative into a novel or whether it’s best to keep it short?
What do you like about each form? Is there anything you dislike about
the forms? Any constraints?

Lisicky: Just about all the pieces in Unbuilt Projects
were written during the last two years of my mother’s struggle with
dementia. She was in a state of mind where her reality was shifting
every few minutes, and so the short form seemed authentic to how I was
seeing at the time. Nothing felt sustained, nothing felt linear.
Disjunction and disruption were the way. So that book needed to be a
collage. It would have been false to write it differently. But it felt
like the decision had already been made for me, and I just had to listen
to it.

The book I’m working on now has two simultaneous linear threads, and
the ongoingness, the cause and effect suggested by linearity, feels like
it’s true to that work. I do like being able to go back and forth
between the compression of the short pieces, and the sprawl of longer
work. I wouldn’t want to have to be confined to any one mode.

UF Review: Aside from sharp and distinct prose, your
writing seems incredibly lyrical. Does that come naturally to you? Is
it innate? Does it come during your revision process? What does your
revision process look like? How would you describe your writing?

Lisicky: I started out as a musician. I wrote music
for many years before I turned to writing, so the sound of things is
really important to me. I think I’ve allowed my work to be more
sonically driven in the last five years, whereas the earlier work was
interested in description. Honestly, I want the sentences to feel
spontaneous, the way singing should feel spontaneous. I don’t want them
to feel deliberate or too worked. These days, I’m after a sort of
artlessness in the writing. The irony, of course, is that the
artlessness comes with lots of work, lots of mistakes where the pitch is
off. You do it over and over until it feels like it isn’t work.

UF Review: When you write, what are you trying to prove? What are you trying to shed light upon?

Lisicky: I don’t want to reproduce what I already
know. I’m only satisfied if I’m writing into a space that takes me out
of habit, certainty — all those myths that tell us life is less
complicated than it is. So the act of writing is really about moving
toward bewilderment, as Nick Flynn would say. It’s not there isn’t great
beauty in bewilderment. There’s something almost holy about it, if we
think of the world as having more tones and colors than we thought.

UF Review: What’s it like to end one project and
start another? Is it hard to leave something behind, to release it to
the world? Is it easy?

Lisicky: It used to be harder. When you’re just
starting you feel like you’ve emptied everything you know and feel into a
project, and then what? That feels different after, say, book three. In
part, that’s because each book might matter less. You realize you’re
just contributing to an ongoing project. By the time you’ve signed the
contract, gone through edits, looked at cover after cover, it feels less
and less like yours. The book has a life of its own, and of course you
want it to be seen, you want it to be meaningful to people, and yet… I
might be making it sound a lot easier than it actually is. There’s a
side of me that looks at this answer, and thinks, now, wait a minute.

UF Review: Do you write with an audience in mind or
for yourself? How do you negotiate the two — audience and self — in the
writing process?

Lisicky: I’m always thinking about the reader, but
you can’t think so much about the reader that you’re writing outside the
work, watching yourself speak and think. It’s an odd trick: to be
entirely immersed in the work and to think about what the reader’s going
to make of the work. I couldn’t begin to articulate how that’s done. I
think it’s essentially about refining two different muscles, getting
them to work together, in sync, so you don’t even know you’re doing it.

UF Review: Where do you look for inspiration? What first called you to write?

Lisicky: I feel aimless and cranky if I’m not making
something. I’ve always needed to be making something, even when I was
kid. To me it’s about making order, paying attention, doing one’s best
to name the light and dark in every situation. It’s probably akin to
praying, though I don’t mean to confuse things with that metaphor.
Honestly, I just write what I need to. If we’re doing what we can to be
present, there’s always some issue pressing on us, something that needs
to be tended to, worked through. It also certainly helps to come under
the spell of a new book, a new writer. Giving oneself permission to be
fed by that.

UF Review: You currently teach at NYU, previously
teaching elsewhere. What do you like about teaching? Does teaching make
you a better writer? A better reader?

Lisicky: Teaching definitely makes you a better
reader, and it can make you a better writer too. I think what I’ve
learned about structure and meaning could only have come through
thinking about those things in relationship to the work of others.

There’s nothing better than a good class — all these minds coming
together on a common project: how do we help this story do what it
already does, but much better? How do we make it sound like itself?
There’s a beauty to that. And I love the classroom as a place of
thinking in action. You come into the room thinking one thing, and you
come out with your first thoughts revised, expanded. And we’re all a
little more awake. (We hope!)

UF Review: If one of your students came to you and asked how to break into the writing world, what would you tell him or her?

Lisicky: I’d say to concentrate on the writing
first. Write what you need to write, write what you love to write. The
monolithic, old school publishing industry is crumbling in front of our
eyes right now, and we don’t have to roll over on our backs and try to
submit to it anymore. In its place there are already so many more
opportunities to be seen: small presses, web-based publishers, etc. So I
don’t think it’s going to be as hard to be published per se, but the
work’s going to have to be stronger if it’s going to rise to the top.
Think about how the web has changed the distribution of music in the
last five years; it’s a lot more democratic, but there’s a lot more. So you have to be good. People do talk about good work; it’s passed around, and we have the channels to do that now.

UF Review: New York is such a great city — any favorite spots?

Lisicky: The city is stimulating; there are so many
choices that I, at least, tune a good deal of it out in order to live a
peaceful, orderly life here. I love walking on the High Line, for
instance, but everyone loves walking on the High Line. I like to go,
though, in the hour before it closes, after nine, and there you are
among the trees, the river right there, the openings beneath buildings.
The lights. It’s oddly restorative in a hyper-stimulating place.

My other favorite place: Coney Island. I love going to the beach in
Coney Island, I love walking the boardwalk, walking out the Steeplechase
Pier. There’s a wonderful building on the west end of the boardwalk
that’s boarded up. For many years it was Child’s restaurant, then more
recently it was Lola Staar’s Dreamland, a roller skating rink. It’s so
full of soul; the outside is covered with stucco friezes of King Neptune
and seahorses and fish. I could look at it all day and be happy.

UF Review: Outside of writing, do you have any
hobbies? Any activities you enjoy? Do your writing and non-writing lives
speak to each other?

I love going to the beach, I love taking day trips out of town. I was
an okay runner for a while but I got out of the habit after an injury.
Now that is very good for the writing, the way it frees up the mind. Physical exercise always seems to be very good for the mind.